My wife’s grandmother dyed last week; she was 96 years old
and has had a good life, so nothing to be sad about per say, but a life to be
celebrated. My mother died last February. She was 90 and also had a good long
life. Also my dog died November 2011 and she was cheated the most as she only
had 7 plus years. Big dogs die young as a rule.
My Mom |
I personally believe in Einstein that energy cannot be
created or destroyed; it can only be changed from one form to another. So I
like to think their energy still inhabits the universe and for the record, that
about as close to being religious as I will ever come. So why am I being such a
Debby Downer on a comic book blog; well this is a filler post in some ways.
Helen |
Due to Helen’s (my grandmother in law) funeral there is no
way I will be reading any comics this week and/or having enough time to do a
week in review. We are down to 4 core writers so getting coverage in short
order is tough thing for us to do. I’ll let them cover up Tuesday, but while
contemplating death I figured out something about death and comics. Not a grand
revelation or a epiphany, yet is a thought that struck me about comics in
general.
Comics are missing the boat because the cape and cowl set
don’t ever deal with death. Death is part of the life cycle. If we lived
forever how different would we act? Would progress grind to a halt because we
are happy with what we have? Would ambition be gone or would it be in
hyper-drive? Would we have marriages? Would days seem like grains of sand or a
beach, each singe day is just a thing and nothing to be treasured?
Kiki - Our big dog (she was 165 pounds) |
Death defines us by giving us an endpoint. It also makes
each us re-evaluate our life in some manner when someone close dies. We learn
to value people more because we know we can’t have them forever. We make
choices in our lives because of their finite nature. Comics miss everything
about death and as such they diminish the books and fail to serve their
readers.
I used to say that everything I have learned and worth
learning I learned from comic books. My above average knowledge of all sorts of
subjects, much of my vocabulary, my sense of justice, my sense of right and
wrong all solidified or comes from comic book reading. The idea that sometimes
doing the right thing can cost you personally, but you still should try and do
it. All of these came from my reading of
comic books. Hell I will pull some fact of left field on a subject and my wife
will ask how the hell did you know that and at least 75% of the time, the
answer is a comic book.
Is is three or four new Supergirls since this? |
Yet with all they have taught me, they never showed me what
it is like to have to truly deal with death. In fact they have trivialized it
so much then the death of Johnny Storm was never of a question of whether he
was dead, it was a question of when he was coming back. Since the companies
refuse to age their characters and have the next generation take over as Green
Arrow, Batman, Iron Man, Captain America or whomever we know death
is something which does not exist in the spandex set. It destroys the value of
the characters because they will last forever and the story that was just told
has no meaning because the next writer is free to re-write anything they want
about the character. Flash is a great example, his death to save the Universe
in Crisis on Infinite Earths resonated with me. As Wally took over being the
Flash it was great to watch him grow into the role. It was when Mark Waid
starting writing the book Wally started to actually become the Flash in more
then name. In “The Return of Barry Allen” storyline we had a gut wrenching
story as we wondered if Barry was coming back or not. Barry was still dead at
the end of the story. When that was wiped away all of the richness of the Flash
legacy was destroyed. Today’s version is a 2D character next to the 3D
character of Wally.
Death defined Wally, it allowed for growth in a character,
it did wipe away Barry’s history, yet it still gave is a clean slate on what to
build. Life and death are the alpha and omega and comics only tell the tale of
the Alpha.
So now it has because such a standard in telling comic book
stories that when the Angel was killed, he was resurrection in the same issue
he died in. The writer remarked something alone the lines of why not, he was
coming back someday anyway. Death has no impact and the characters have no
endpoints and therefore something is less in the dramatic structure of the
stories. The ability to make something seem alive and new is ripped of its true
vitality if death is not a part of the equation. Immortality is not our world
and something we cannot relate to or understand. It is an important way that
creates a distance and inability for us to be able to relate to the characters.
I always told my children, you can’t be smart without stupid
people. The characters can’t feel truly alive without death.
Hopefully next week we will be back to normal.
John Byrne did a great job handling death in his Generation series. Sure he had immortality too, but when a character really died, it was gut-wrenching and there were long lasting repercussions. The problem with some comic deaths is that they are often meaningless in terms of the purpose (sales gimmick or can't think of a decent story). Ronnie Raymond should never have "died" or been turned into a drunk. Jason was a good replacement for Firestorm, but when you throw away a character with potential, then someone is bound to come back and want to reuse them. Barry's death and Kara's had real meaning and significance.
ReplyDeleteIn some ways comics have been rife with death. Whole universes disappear in a blink of an event and all that came before comes rushing to a "dead" end. It doesn't matter if they're reanimated in another universe or update, what was before is still gone. I don't really like change, but I can see the need for it sometimes. Still, I don't want to see Bruce die prematurely. Then all his struggles are for naught -- Although, if you do keep the death real, then you get the nice Flash legacy and influence. I wouldn't be who I am today if my father had lived to rear me as a child.
I love Spider-Girl in that we got to see the continuing story of married Peter and MJ. There was legacy in that book too. But when it was finally cancelled (hiatus), they didn't kill her. We just stop the story and leave the potential for more.
I think these types of posts are always appropriate, Jim. We're comic readers who live in the real world and its the real world stuff that strengthens our connections to one another. Ever since Pam and I realized we weren't going to have any more children, I've been really feeling my mortality. I hope I have decades left, but chances are I'm over the half-way point. I want to cherish the fleeting things of life (like making Batman masks with my son) and re-prioritize things that don't really matter in the grand scheme. I'm glad I have an assured hope of a continued existence, which gives me purpose day in and day out. There IS more than just this life and that's good, because this life is very short.
You are right, Matthew, death is rampant in comics, just nothing that means anything to the characters for the most part. And having limited time does force one to prioritize. Much of what you said reinforces why I wish the cape and cowl set addressed death and made it "real" for the characters as it adds more depth and truth to the characters.
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